QUEST
Orientation: Building and Connecting the
QUEST Community
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QUEST senior students work
together on low-ropes activities
at the first annual Senior
Orientation, held on Aug. 24 at
Genesee Valley Outdoor Learning
Center. |
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A group of incoming QUEST
students connect and rise to the
top during team-building
activities at orientation. |
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New QUEST students collaborate
during brainstorming session at
Camp Horizons in Harrisonburg,
Va., at New Student Orientation. |
Each spring, the Quality Enhancement
Systems and Teams (QUEST) Honors Fellows
Program admits 75 new students to the
program. On August 26-27, 2007, the new
students were introduced to the QUEST
program at the annual New Student
Orientation, held at Camp Horizons in
Harrisonburg, Va. New Student
Orientation provides students with the
chance to begin collaborating, which is
especially critical given that students
are in the same cohort for all three
years. The QUEST community is built
during the New Student Orientation. It
affords incoming students an opportunity
to understand what QUEST is all about
and start engaging in the program,
stated Rachel Cohen, QUEST Program
Coordinator.
At orientation, students participate
in ice-breaker activities, low ropes and
team building programs, and specialized
QUEST activities that introduce many of
the concepts elaborated upon in
BMGT/ENES 190H: Introduction to Design
and Quality, the initial course in the
QUEST sequence.
Orientation is also a platform for
student teams to connect. BMGT/ENMES
190H is a team-based course and each
team has a student mentor with whom they
connect during the offsite program. The
QUEST Mentor Program engages second- and
third-year QUEST students who
participate in coursework geared to
guiding the student teams through the
BMGT/ENES 190H experience. Im a mentor
because I appreciate the impact that
QUEST has made on my way of thinking
about my future and am eager to help
others receive the same benefits that
the program has given me, said Matt
Sriram, a second-year QUEST student.
QUEST also held its first Senior
Orientation at Genesee Valley Outdoor
Learning Center, located north of
Baltimore, on Aug. 24. The Senior
Orientation brings students together
prior to the start of the semester to
prepare them for their final QUEST
course BMGT/ENES 490H: The Total Quality
Practicum. 490H is a team-based course
where students consult on a project for
a professional organization.
During the day, students engage in
physical challenges and team building
activities to reconnect with one another
and with the program. While
participating in team building ropes
activities, I was able to see first hand
the various strengths of my classmates.
I think orientation truly builds a
community amongst QUEST third-year
students by getting us out of our
comfortable environment and submerging
us into a day of activities at a camp,
remarked QUEST senior student Ilana
Jaffey.
Orientation programming is only one
aspect of the program that integrates
students into the QUEST Learning
Community. The community is home to
students, faculty, staff, alumni, and
professional partners who all play a
valuable role in creating the overall
QUEST experience. Community members
contribute to a wide range of shared
learning experiences, networking and
project opportunities through
initiatives including classroom
education and Integrating QUEST (IQ)
Events, which are extracurricular and
provide a forum for learning that
extends beyond the classroom.
The Quality Enhancement Systems and
Teams (QUEST) Honors Fellows program is
a three-year undergraduate program
providing a reality-based learning
experience for students across three
disciplines at the University of
Maryland. QUEST unites students from
business, engineering and computer,
mathematical and physical sciences.
QUEST courses are focused on
cross-functional collaboration,
quantitative methods, interactive
planning, and quality principles.
Further information on the QUEST
program can be found at:
www.rhsmith.umd.edu/quest.
▓ Pete Baird,
MBA Candidate Class of 2009, Smith Media
Group